- v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
- Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
Difference between revisions of "Seed"
Line 61: | Line 61: | ||
* [[DF2014:Celery|Celery]] Seeds | * [[DF2014:Celery|Celery]] Seeds | ||
* [[DF2014:Chickpea|Chickpeas]] | * [[DF2014:Chickpea|Chickpeas]] | ||
− | * [[DF2014: | + | * [[DF2014:Chicory|Chicory]] Seeds |
* [[DF2014:Cowpea|Cowpeas]] | * [[DF2014:Cowpea|Cowpeas]] | ||
* [[DF2014:Cucumber|Cucumber]] Seeds | * [[DF2014:Cucumber|Cucumber]] Seeds |
Revision as of 23:24, 11 July 2014
This article was migrated from DF2014:Seed and may be inaccurate for the current version of DF (v50.14). See this page for more information. |
v50.14 · v0.47.05 This article is about the current version of DF.Note that some content may still need to be updated. |
- Looking for information on world generation seeds? See Advanced world generation.
- For information on seed management, see this page.
Seeds are used in farming to grow crops. They can be stored in bags (100 seeds per bag), which can in turn be stored in barrels or pots (10 bags per barrel/pot). Different seed types can't be mixed within a bag, so storing 10 seeds, one each of 10 different types, would require 10 different bags.
Seeds can be brought on embark or obtained by trading. They can also be produced from plants (acquired by plant gathering or growing the respective crops). When a plant is eaten or used in brewing, milling or plant processing, it leaves one or two plantable seeds (see below for details). The exceptions are valley herb, bloated tuber, kobold bulb, and muck root, which will not leave behind seeds after processing. Cooking plants in a kitchen will not produce seeds.
Seed List
The following seeds of 155 plants can be stockpiled:
- Single-grain Wheat Seeds
- Two-grain Wheat Seeds
- Soft Wheat Seeds
- Hard Wheat Seeds
- Spelt Seeds
- Barley Seeds
- Buckwheet Seeds
- Oats Seeds
- Alfalfa Seeds
- Rye Seeds
- Sorghum Seeds
- Rice
- Maize
- Quinoa Seeds
- Kaniwa Seeds
- Bitter Vetch Seeds
- Pendant Amaranth Seeds
- Blood Amaranth Seeds
- Purple Amaranth Seeds
- Red Spinach Seeds
- Elephant-head Amaranth Seeds
- Pearl Millet
- White Millet
- Finger Millet
- Foxtail Millet
- Fonio
- Teff
- Flax Seeds
- Jute Seeds
- Hemp Seeds
- Cotton Seeds
- Ramie Seeds
- Kenaf Seeds
- Papyrus Seeds
- Artichoke Seeds
- Asparagus Seeds
- Bambara Groundnuts
- String Beans
- Broad Beans
- Beet Seeds
- Bitter Melon Seeds
- Cabbage Seeds
- Caper Seeds
- Carrot Seeds
- Cassava Seeds
- Celery Seeds
- Chickpeas
- Chicory Seeds
- Cowpeas
- Cucumber Seeds
- Eggplant Seeds
- Garden Cress Seeds
- Garlic Seeds
- Horned Melon Seeds
- Leek Seeds
- Lentils
- Lettuce Seeds
- Mung Beans
- Muskmelon Seeds
- Onion Seeds
- Parsnip Seeds
- Peas
- Peanuts
- Pepper Seeds
- Potato Seeds
- Radish Seeds
- Red Beans
- Rhubarb Seeds
- Soybeans
- Spinach Seeds
- Squash Seeds
- Sweet Potato Seeds
- Taro Seeds
- Tomato Seeds
- Tomatillo Seeds
- Turnip Seeds
- Urad Beans
- Watermelon Seeds
- Winter Melon Seeds
- Lesser Yam Seeds
- Long Yam Seeds
- Purple Yam Seeds
- White Yam Seeds
- Passion Fruit Seeds
- Grape Seeds
- Cranberry Seeds
- Bilberry Seeds
- Blueberry Seeds
- Blackberry Seeds
- Raspberry Seeds
- Pineapple Seeds
- Abaca Seeds
- Banana Seeds
- Carambola Seeds
- Cashews
- Coffee Beans
- Durian Seeds
- Guava Seeds
- Papaya Seeds
- Paradise Nuts
- Rambutan Seeds
- Tea Seeds
- Avocado Pits
- Lime Seeds
- Pomelo Seeds
- Citron Seeds
- Orange Seeds
- Bitter Orange Seeds
- Finger Lime Seeds
- Round Lime Seeds
- Desert Lime Seeds
- Kumquat Seeds
- Custard-apple Seeds
- Date Palm Seeds
- Lychee Seeds
- Macadamia Nuts
- Olive Pits
- Pomegranade Seeds
- Almonds
- Apple Seeds
- Apricot Pits
- Bayberry Seeds
- Cherry Pits
- Ginkgo Seeds
- Hazel Nuts
- Peach Pits
- Pear Seeds
- Pecans
- Persimmon Seeds
- Plum Pits
- Sand Pear Seeds
- Walnuts
- Plump Helmet Spawn
- Pig Tail Seeds
- Cave Wheat Seeds
- Sweet Pod Seeds
- Rock Nuts
- Prickle Berry Seeds
- Strawberry Seeds
- Longland Grass Seeds
- Rat Weed Seeds
- Fisher Berry Seeds
- Rope Reed Seeds
- Dimple Cup Spawn
- Blade Weed Seeds
- Hide Root Seeds
- Silver Barb Seeds
- Sun Berry Seeds
- Whip Vine Seeds
- Acorns
- Acacia Seeds
- Chestnuts
- Candlenuts
- Mango Pits
- Cacao Beans
Seed Production
Seeds are produced by brewing (at a still), milling (at a millstone or quern), processing (at a farmer's workshop), or by dwarves eating the plants raw (uncooked). Below is a table showing the various seed production methods for all seed-producing plants.
In order to prevent your fortress becoming cluttered with thousands of seeds, there is a cap of 200 seeds per type of plant. Seed producing activities will only produce seeds if your fortress contains fewer than 200 seeds of that type. You can exceed the 200 seed cap by buying seeds from caravans, and seed production will restart when your stocks fall below 200.
For information on where to grow and/or collect plants, consult the page on crops.
Plant Name | Type | Brewing | Eating Raw | Milling | Process Plants |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plump helmet | Food/Drink | Dwarven wine | X | ||
Pig tail | Drink/Cloth | Dwarven ale | X | ||
Cave wheat | Food/Drink | Dwarven beer | X | ||
Sweet pod | Food/Drink | Dwarven rum | X | Barrel | |
Quarry bush | Food/Oil | Bag | |||
Dimple cup | Dye | X | |||
Prickle berry | Food/Drink | Prickle berry wine | X | ||
Wild strawberry | Food/Drink | Strawberry wine | X | ||
Longland grass | Food/Drink | Longland beer | X | ||
Rat weed | Food/Drink | Sewer brew | X | ||
Fisher berry | Food/Drink | Fisher berry wine | X | ||
Rope reed | Drink/Cloth | River spirits | X | ||
Blade weed | Dye | X | |||
Hide root | Dye | X | |||
Sliver barb | Drink/Dye | Gutter cruor | X | ||
Sun berry | Food/Drink | Sunshine | X | ||
Whip vine | Food/Drink | Whip wine | X |
Note: In case you are confused about getting spam of messages like "Urist McFarmer cancels Plant Seeds: Needs %seedname%", while you are sure that you have enough seeds, no burrow restrictions or closed doors, the reason for this is most likely this: the haulers see a seed somewhere and take the whole seed bag from stockpile to go pick it up, making the farmer cancel his job. The problem is exacerbated when barrels are used on the seed stockpile, because the dwarves will additionally store the seed bags inside barrels, blocking even more seeds during each hauling job and extending hauling jobs by first bringing the seed bag to the seed, then returning to the stockpile, picking up the barrel to bring it to the bag, storing the bag in the barrel and only then bringing the barrel bag to the stockpile. During all this time, the seed barrel and all its contents will be blocked from access by any other job.
You can simply disallow barrels from the stockpile, which requires a somewhat larger stockpile but makes seed collection jobs much shorter and less disruptive. Bags will always be used to store seeds in stockpiles, you cannot forbid that.
Another way to deal with this problem is this: set up 2 seed stockpiles, with the larger (primary) one set to only accept items from links. Set the secondary (smaller) pile to take from anywhere and give to the main stockpile. Now, when a seed showes up in your dining room or brewery, the dwarves should try to put it into the secondary pile first, which shouldn't have anything in it for long (so no bag for world tour). Once the seed arrives in the secondary stockpile, a new job will be created, moving the seed over into the main stockpile. Now the bag will be picked up to move that seed into it, but if the piles are next to each other it should only be in transit for a few seconds reducing the likelihood of cancellation spam.
As a workaround, you can finally make use of the peculiarities of stockpile commmands: setting a stockpile to "take" from a mill, still or farmer's workshop will prevent the workshop from sending its products to any other stockpile. If the stockpile in question doesn't accept seeds, all seeds produced by the workshop will stay in the building, readily accessible to farmers. This can be handy if the workshop is directly adjacent to the farm plot, but can cause cluttering of the workshop if other products like barrels of booze aren't moved out of the shop regularly.